Considerations on brain age predictions from repeatedly sampled data across time

Author:

Korbmacher Max123ORCID,Wang Meng‐Yun34,Eikeland Rune34,Buchert Ralph5,Andreassen Ole A.26ORCID,Espeseth Thomas78,Leonardsen Esten27,Westlye Lars T.27ORCID,Maximov Ivan I.12,Specht Karsten349

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health and Functioning Western Norway University of Applied Sciences Bergen Norway

2. Norwegian Centre for Mental Disorders Research (NORMENT) Oslo University Hospital & Institute of Clinical Medicine University of Oslo Oslo Norway

3. Mohn Medical Imaging and Visualisation Center (MMIV) Bergen Norway

4. Department of Biological and Medical Psychology University of Bergen Bergen Norway

5. Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology and Nuclear Medicine University Medical Center Hamburg‐Eppendorf Hamburg Germany

6. KG Jebsen Centre for Neurodevelopmental Disorders University of Oslo Oslo Norway

7. Department of Psychology University of Oslo Oslo Norway

8. Department of Psychology Oslo New University College Oslo Norway

9. Department of Education UiT The Arctic University of Norway Tromsø Norway

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionBrain age, the estimation of a person's age from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) parameters, has been used as a general indicator of health. The marker requires however further validation for application in clinical contexts. Here, we show how brain age predictions perform for the same individual at various time points and validate our findings with age‐matched healthy controls.MethodsWe used densely sampled T1‐weighted MRI data from four individuals (from two densely sampled datasets) to observe how brain age corresponds to age and is influenced by acquisition and quality parameters. For validation, we used two cross‐sectional datasets. Brain age was predicted by a pretrained deep learning model.ResultsWe found small within‐subject correlations between age and brain age. We also found evidence for the influence of field strength on brain age which replicated in the cross‐sectional validation data and inconclusive effects of scan quality.ConclusionThe absence of maturation effects for the age range in the presented sample, brain age model bias (including training age distribution and field strength), and model error are potential reasons for small relationships between age and brain age in densely sampled longitudinal data. Clinical applications of brain age models should consider of the possibility of apparent biases caused by variation in the data acquisition process.

Funder

H2020 European Research Council

Norges Forskningsråd

Helse Sør-Øst RHF

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience

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